III. The cultural evolution among the German-speaking minorities in Romania between 1918-1933.

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10.

10.1. The political premises for the integration of the German minority in the Romanian state after 1918.

10.2. The institutional and legislative framework: The Proclamation from Alba Iulia, The treaty for the protection of minorities, The Constitution of 1923. Other legislative stipulations.

10.3 The League of Nations and the protection of the German minority.

11.

11.1. Communities with German roots in Greater Romania. Statistics based on census, settlement, history, cultural and religious tradition. Regional and zonal spread, distribution in rural and urban areas.

11.1.1. Transylvania

11.1.2. Banat

11.1.3. Bucovina

11.1.4. Bessarabia

11.1.5. Sătmar

11.1.6 German-speaking communities in “the Romanian Old Kingdom” and Dobrogea.

11.2 German-speaking Jews from Bucovina

12.

12.1. The image of the other (Romanian, Hungarian, Jewish, etc.) in the public discourse (political, journalistic, literary) of the Germans in Romania (1918-1933).

12.2. The image of the German from Romania (Saxons, Swabians, etc.) in the public discourse (political, journalistic, literary) of the Romanian, Hungarian, Jewish speakers. (1918-1933).

13.

13.1 The German language as native language in Greater Romania

13.1.1 Standard German and dialects. Statistic reports regarding the preferential

16.1. The local German-speaking cultural fields and the Central-European German-speaking space.

16.1.1. "Images" of the "Center" in the collective mental of the German-speaking population in Transylvania, Banat, Bucovina, Bessarabia, etc.; reference (positive or negative) to the recent imperial past.

16.1.2. Circulation of people, books, ideas from and to Germany and Austria. German-speaking students from Romania in German and Austrian universities (case studies).